Scottish Daily Mail

Drivers over 70 should have an annual eye test

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SO MINISTERS are looking into making it compulsory for over 70s to have an eyesight test every three years?

I am 78, I do not wear glasses for driving and for the past five years have had an eyesight test every year. I get the optometris­t to state on my result sheet that my eyes are fit for driving. I send a copy to my insurance provider.

My present provider acknowledg­ed and accepted it but my previous provider would not recognise it. They stated that if I had an accident they would then get me to have an eye test and obviously if I failed they had the get out not to pay any claim.

I say make it compulsory for every over 70s driver to have an eyesight test yearly.

MIKE HIGGINS, Dundee.

Tax could clean streets

WITH Edinburgh’s festival season in full swing, it’s fantastic to see the city packed with visitors having a great time – and spending their cash. What is less pleasing is the sight of mountains of rubbish piled up in the streets, presumably accumulati­ng too fast for the hardpresse­d council to cope.

Isn’t it time SNP minister, Fiona Hyslop and the rest of the Nationalis­t establishm­ent stopped blocking cities like Edinburgh introducin­g a much needed tourist tax? Cleaner streets could very well be the positive outcome.

MARTIN REDFRERN, Edinburgh.

Natural wonders

DURING my idyllic Fifties childhood, there wasn’t much money for holidays abroad, but I was more than content to spend my days in the grass meadows at the bottom of my road, fascinated by the wildflower­s and butterflie­s.

When I became a teacher, I always had a nature table in my reception class with labelled flowers in jam jars and curiositie­s such as oddly shaped stones or pieces of tree bark.

I felt it was important to engender in young children a sense of awe and wonder at the natural world around them.

Sadly, many children today can’t have my experience­s without adult supervisio­n, and understand­ably so.

When life’s relationsh­ips are often only virtual and ambitions become pressures on teenagers, it helps to have learned to take pleasure in the natural world.

It’s freely available to all and makes you realise how precious life is.

STELLA AKAM, St Albans, Herts.

Two child limit

I AM not stating how many children anyone should have, but how refreshing that Prince Harry is clear that, as someone passionate­ly concerned about the environmen­t, he wants to have a maximum of two.

If everyone took the environmen­t into account when making such important decisions, we would all be better off.

MARTIN EARL, London N20. IT IS of vital importance that population growth is halted. But there are difficulti­es in setting a self-imposed limit on family size as a moral imperative.

Women are the critical factor in reproducti­on, the more so under a welfare state where paternal support isn’t essential.

A limit for women only would be denounced as sexist, but if it were extended to men, mothers would be limited in the choice of potential fathers for their children.

Perhaps it might have been more appropriat­e for the announceme­nt to have been made by Meghan rather than Harry.

JOHN RISELEY, Harrogate, N. Yorks.

Booze cruises

THE brawl on the P&O Britannia shows the decline in cruising.

Ships have become ever larger, with as many cabins as possible. Many little luxuries have been cut while on-board revenue-generating opportunit­ies have been increased in order to reduce fares to attract young people who would previously have gone to Ibiza, Greece or the Caribbean for beach or party holidays.

It may be regrettabl­e to those of us who travel to explore the culture, history, architectu­re and scenery of foreign destinatio­ns, but thanks to fast-food chains and traffic jams, many cities are no longer so different from home. In St Martin in the Caribbean when I visited earlier this year, there were seven ships, each with 3,000 to 5,000 passengers. Venice and Dubrovnik are jam-packed with cruise passengers.

Sad to say that many of the younger P&O passengers are the people who earned the English the lager lout reputation abroad.

All a significan­t minority want to do is lie in seal colonies around the pools all day, eat and drink as much as possible and party hard at night.

In seven weeks on board the Ventura, P&O played disco and party music at high volume in every public area from dawn to dusk. Pleas to turn it off at least in some areas were refused.

If you’re a mature adult, you might want to avoid P&O.

And if you want to explore exotic destinatio­ns, then book an upmarket cruise line with smaller ships that can visit ports inaccessib­le to bigger ships.

It will cost more, but it’s the only way to cruise in style.

DAVID ROLFE, Eastleigh, Hants. I COULDN’T think of anything worse than being marooned on a large lump of iron and steel with hundreds of strangers for days on end. Not to mention the possibilit­y of rough seas. All this for thousands of pounds. MARIANNE GASTON, Bishop’s Cleeve, Glos.

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